The Women of Blues
Contemporary and Classic - Essential
Recordings and classic blues biographies
Endless Mountains Blues Fest 2006 - Women of the Blues
A note about the
Classic Blues singers...
"The
blues? Why, the blues are a part of me. They're like a chant.
The blues are like spirituals, almost sacred. When we sing blues, we're
singing out our hearts, we're singing out our feelings. Maybe we're hurt
and just can't answer back, then we sing or maybe even hum the blues.
When I sing, 'I walk the floor, wring my hands and cry --
Yes, I walk the floor, wring my hands and cry,'
... what I'm doing is letting my soul out."
-Alberta Hunter
Traveling
and working together, performers adapted each other's styles and songs and
created the classic blues.
Ma Rainey was the first of the classic blues singers, nicknamed the Mother of
the Blues, She was one of the first to feature the blues onstage, in the early
1900's. With her husband, "Pa" Rainey, she began barnstorming across
the South. She dazzled show-goers with her feather fans and glittery headbands,
and would appear on stage blowing kisses. She
performed a rural down-home blues.
Bessie Smith
- Empress of the Blues -Legend has it that Ma Rainey kidnapped Bessie, was a
mother figure to her, and taught her to sing the blues. Bessie sported
spectacular gold and jewels, feather plumes, and fringed dresses. Bessie
recorded 180 songs, with top-notch accompanists like Louis Armstrong. She
became the top-selling blues artist of the period.
Ida Cox sang
with the distinctive sound of St. Louis, with a nasal and booming voice that
belted out her songs. Her style and songs were copied by many. Ida Cox managed
her own career. She performed with spirit and humor, negotiated her own deals,
paid her performers, and booked her act herself in the next town. Ida Cox
headlined on the vaudeville circuit and traveled to Chicago for recording
sessions and to work the Plantation Club with King Oliver's Creole Jazz
Band.
While
Ma Rainey, Bessie Smith, and Ida Cox toured the Southern Circuit, other blues
women migrated north and
were soon playing in the big city clubs and cabarets. In
Chicago, they preferred down-home blues and jazz. In the urban atmosphere of
clubs and cabarets, northern blues women presented a more sophisticated formal
style of blues, rather than belting out their songs.
Paramount, Columbia and
Victor and others, established "race" catalogues, distributed mainly
to black communities through record stores in the North and mail order to the
South. Their scouts traveled the country-side for the best talent. It was almost
exclusively the classic blues singers who were signed.
Calliope Film
Resources. "The Classic Blues and the Women Who Sang Them." Copyright
2000
Click
here for Classic Blues Books and
Recordings--->
Contemporary
Artists
Classic
blueswomen
Recordings
Back to the site directory
Email The Association
©
2004
Scranton/Wilkes Barre Blues Association